For as long as I can remember, I've had a thing for old houses. I grew up in Colorado, so "old" to me was 1940. I thought I was looking at a typo the first time I saw a house listed with a date from the 1700s ... how can something so old still be standing? And people living in it? Amazing. Lucky for me, New England is filled with old homes.
So, back to Newtown. We entered the address of the original farmhouse into our GPS, which gave us the opportunity to see a neighborhood with houses in our range (size and price). This type of exercise is mostly fantasy. We have no idea where we'll actually move to when Marc's residency is done. But it's fun to dream, especially when the setting is this beautiful.
When we were back in Boston, I continued my Newtown house tour online. This is my new current favorite: 1 Jeremiah Road.
The house is filled with things that make my heart flutter, like the vaulted ceilings in the kitchen
with wooden beams, of course.
The wooden door is amazing. I wonder if it's a main entrance?
I think the house would lend itself very well to a Tom Scheerer type of decor. Everything is so cozy and small-proportioned. Except for the fireplaces - nothing small about those.
But really ... I could see a room like the one above, and like the dining room below,
filled with comfortable furniture like this Tom Scheerer living room.
One of the things I like about Tom Scheerer is that he doesn't fill old houses with old things. In the next picture, for example, the coffee table and side table keep the room from feeling like a museum. And those lamps!
The real estate websites only show one of the four bedrooms in the house
and two of the four fireplaces.
It's an eyesore now, but I love to stare at every detail and imagine how I would change it.

The barn is a "rare find," featuring a stone fireplace and plenty of space.
I imagine it being used as a three-season gathering spot, with a long rustic table and mismatched chairs that can fit more people than the small proportioned house probably can. The fireplace looks big enough to keep the barn warm even on a crisp fall night. Mmm, when my daydreams take a turn like this, I never want to wake up.
I imagine it being used as a three-season gathering spot, with a long rustic table and mismatched chairs that can fit more people than the small proportioned house probably can. The fireplace looks big enough to keep the barn warm even on a crisp fall night. Mmm, when my daydreams take a turn like this, I never want to wake up.